Originally posted by Denis Leber:
I am trying to figure out what the Philosophy of the IP'G is. A short while ago we had the “use a judge for a bluff” topic where a Level 5 judge was “disappointed” by everyone who wanted to assign a penalty.
This time punishing hard seems to be the right way…. I will get there eventually and understand when an infraction is to be punished hard, while on other occasions “talking to the player” is enough. The latter being no valid option at all in the IPG. So how can something that is not in the IPG be correct, while downgrading is never done.
Why only a caution?
In this question it didn't take time at all… when arriving at the table both players knew what was going on. They both had already figured out that there were only 4 basic land types when AP cast Tribal Flame. The question clearly states that APs action was not intentional. Being Head Judge in this question I had the possibility to do so. It is also a better sign towards the player with the tactical error to pay more attention to the game.
Quote from the IPG:
“No extra time is required for a Caution, as any Caution that takes more than a few moments to resolve should be upgraded to a Warning.” meaning that if something only takes a few moments to clearify a caution is right.
Also: Announcing the “amount of damage” before resolution is no game information. He could also say “I kill your Rhine or Die, Rhino Die…. He did not respond to a specific question of the NAP for example ”how much damage does that tribal flame do". In a competitive Tournament the NAP should have known for himself how much damage tribal flame deals.
Edited Kyle Connelly (June 27, 2015 06:34:39 AM)
Edited Rich Marin (June 29, 2015 03:59:33 PM)
Originally posted by Eli Meyer:
Does A actually have a responsibility to represent what will happen in the future accurately, regardless of whether it's based on derived or free info? The Flames hasn't resolved yet–it hasn't dealt any damage, so “five to your rhino” represents an (inaccurate) representation of what the board state will be after some priority passes, not as it is now.
Originally posted by Markus Bauer:GRV on the active player for having his Flames deal five damage–but I'd give him long enough to be sure that “5 to your rhino” was a mistake and not a mind-game.
What would you rule if NAP actually let it resolve and puts his Rhino into the graveyard without further actions?
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